“Coaches want to see multiple videos, grades,” Williams said. “I didn’t want to send one email with one attachment and then send more emails with more attachments.

“I didn’t want to be annoying the coach.”

Yeah, he didn’t want to be filling up the inboxes of coaches and becoming an irritant.

After all, the idea is to make the coach like you, not loathe you.

Williams wanted to simplify the procedure.

So Williams — as bright and benevolent as he is polite — worked to find a solution to the onerous task forced upon college coaches.

A one-page solution.

One-stop shopping for college coaches.

A website called “mySportResume Inc.”

It is something else for the high school athlete working to make himself or herself attractive to college recruiters.

Really, SOMETHING ELSE.

It’s that good.

Information on an athlete, videos and whatever else that might be necessary can be virtually included on one page — kind of like a resume that one might send to a prospective employer.

In this case, that employer is a college coach..

The best part of an excellent concept is that it’s free. There are no fees, unlike other recruiting-type services available on the Internet.

The teenager from the Pittsburgh area, with the help of his father, Russell, developed the non-profit organization mySportResume Inc. “to help fellow athletes across the United States.”

He wants to give every athlete a chance at no cost to the player — something most other scouting and recruiting services don’t offer.

“We felt like every kid should have a chance, but there should be no strings attached,” Williams said. “Second, these types of things want to make money off of kids. We didn’t want to follow that path of making money off of kids.”

Williams plays shortstop on the baseball team at Franklin Regional in Murraysville, Pennsylvania. He had played some basketball in the past, too, but he said an injury kept him off the court this season.

The system allows athletes to link up to four sports on their resume.

So much can be accomplished with it. There’s a directory with more than 1,000 colleges of all levels of play, for instance, and athletes can link up with different schools in so many ways, from academic rankings to zip codes.

His program helped Williams athletically and academically.

“I hold myself to a high standard,” he said.

Williams said he has some offers to play baseball as he works on a likely business degree in college, part of the result of this process he undertook in conjunction with his father.

He began the project about a year ago.

Armed with the idea, Williams turned to his father, who had a connection with an understanding of web pages and design, and they were off. Eventually, they went to a web company to finish it.

“I sent it out and got positive results,” Williams said. “I thought, ‘This is cool. This could work for other people, in too.’”

It’s pretty impressive. The website is easy to navigate and quite helpful.

“The recruiting process can be very stressful for athletes, and many have no idea about what to do or where to turn,” Williams is quoted as saying in a press release that announced the launch this past week.

“However, one of the easiest and most-overlooked things that an athlete can do on their own is proactively reaching out to coaches to share their recruiting information. ... Our vision is to ensure that every athlete in the country has access to these types of tools to take a shot at their college dream.”

From a dream, in a sense, Williams was able to concoct a reality.

MySportResume has simplified what can be a difficult task, giving a chance to others who just want to play sports in college.